As the live music shutdown continues, nostalgia is at an all-time high. The impending doom of winter is also bringing an end to outdoor drive-in and pod concerts, which will inevitably thin out the number of available live streams. Enter Twitter user rico monkeon who, over the summer, launched a new website that auto-generates a ’90s festival lineup just for you and provides vintage VHS footage for each act.

The U.K.-based site definitely has a British bent (see: the letterhead that describes it as “a randomly generated line-up of bands who played a UK festival in the 1990s.”) The 1990s nostalgia goes beyond just the bands, as well, with throwback stage names including The Nintendo Virtual Boy Stage, The Blockbuster Video Stage, The Kellogs Corn Pops Stage, and many more.

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As for the music, one of the greatest joys is seeing how the headlining acts have progressed in over two decades. Examples include watching a young Lenny Kravitz rock Pinkpop Festival in 1993 with “Are You Gonna Go My Way”, or Cypress Hill doing their thing with a full VHS-quality set from Reading Festival in 1994.

The lineups also host older acts that had their heydays long before the 1990s, but remained top headliners into the final decade of the century. Whether that comes by way of the Velvet Underground reunion show at Glastonbury 1993 or Neil Young playing “Cinnamon Girl” in 1997 at Phoenix Festival, the site does not discriminate based on age. While the generator may be U.K.-centric, users also have the chance of scoring a fuzzed-out Flaming Lips set at Lollapalooza in 1994 or No Doubt playing “Don’t Speak” to a sold out Red Rocks Amphitheatre in 1996, and many more shows in the States.

Then, there are the little details like the ’90s-era digital animations that dance below the video screen. For added effect, little animated rain drops fall down for those infamous muddy sets as the characters don umbrellas and rain slickers.

The ’90s festival generator supplies an endless amount of fun with an infinite amount of combinations and vast archives of fan and pro-shot videos that abound on the internet. While we may not see the return of physical music festivals for some time, trying to score the perfect Nostalgia Fest lineup is a hell of a way to distract yourself for an afternoon. Head on over to monkeon.co.uk to try it out.